Scary story

This passage has all the elements of a scary story. Jesus and the
disciples get into a boat and a horrible storm comes up. The disciples
scream that they are going to die, reach the shore, step out onto
land—and find themselves in a graveyard where a naked demon-possessed
man is wandering about. I imagine hissing and whispering and Linda
Blair, but maybe I’ve seen too many movies. As a kid I used to lie in
bed at night trying hard to remember exactly what my Sunday school
teacher said: If I had Jesus in my heart, the demons couldn’t possess
me—but what if I doubted?

In this
story the demons seem nothing at all like those I used to imagine. For
one thing, Jesus speaks to them in a polite manner (James Alison says
he is “courteous and gentle”), and never seems to have a very hard time
with them. They know him—he says some words and they leave. The more
frightening forces of death in Luke’s story are the religious
authorities, the Roman Empire, the crowd in the end, the forces that
conspire in his murder.

Karl Barth refers to this story as
“burlesque” and “farcical,” suggesting that the demons more ridiculous
than frightening, a herd of squealing pigs in a panic. Perhaps this
story undermines the conventional understanding of demons (even the
typical understanding of Jesus’ day) in order to reveal a different
layer of evil.

Rene Girard’s reading of the text is interesting in this regard (see the 6th chapter of James Alison’s Faith Beyond Resentment or “Girardian reflections on the Lectionary”. The Gerasenes needed this man, an agreed-upon “bad guy,” to represent evil—he was someone out there,
someone the social structure could cast out. This is how the system of
the world maintains order; the community is unified by defining itself
over against an other. In this case, the Gerasenes seize and bind the
demoniac, but he keeps getting loose. This is actually
convenient—perhaps the chains are purposefully made weak because the
Gerasenes need his escape and recapture to maintain the system. Girard
suggests that there is collusion between the Gerasenes and their
demoniac; the demonicac becomes the repository for the community’s
perversity, bearing the pathology of the system.

Jesus acts to
humanize “the bad guy.” He rebukes the legions—the myriad voices of the
social order—and restores the man to his right mind. The man is
peaceful and free, but this scares the people of the town deeply
because it messes with their order. Of course the man would like to
stay with Jesus, but Jesus says, no, go home to show the city how its
order collapses in the face of the gospel, the word of God. What an
assignment!

Barth says demon possession is the “supremely
visible and audible and palpable dominion of nothingness over
[humanity].” Do we operate according to some hidden social mechanism of
expulsion? Are our actions controlled by The Empire, Money and Power,
The Economy? We may be more possessed than we know.

Jesus comes to scoop us up out of the death-dealing, death-making systems we create to maintain our righteousness or our security, and into the love of God.